Forgetting about daylight saving time since 1918
Is the AMS living up to its sustainability goals? See where your food is coming from. Page 6 Birds crash: No. 1-ranked men’s basketball team settles for bronze. Page 7
U
the ubyssey
MARCH 14, 2011 volume 92, number xli room 24, student union building published mondays and thursdays feedback@ubyssey.ca
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events
march 14 2011 volume xcii, no xli editorial coordinating editor
Justin McElroy : coordinating@ubyssey.ca
news editor
Arshy Mann : news@ubyssey.ca
classified
multimedia editor
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY. 2-bedroom garden suite. We’re located in a quiet, family-oriented neighbourhood, one-half block east of Dunbar Street. Close to shops, public transit (#7 direct to downtown and #25 direct to UBC), community centre, public library, and other amenities. Carpets (installed May’05), big kitchen, shared laundry, high speed internet, cable, garden (with 4 fruit trees, a vegetable patch and a newly painted sundeck that is perfect for BBQs!) and plenty of storage in a double car garage. Non-smoking. No pets. Thank you! Rent is $1100/ month plus share of utilities. Please phone Aaron at 778-7083352 for appointment.
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ongoing events
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Ubyssey Production • Come
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culture editors
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help us create this baby! Learn about layout and editing. Expect to be fed. • Every Sunday and Wednesday, 2pm. resource groups • Are you
working on a progressive project, but need funding? Do you have an idea, but can’t get it off the ground? Apply to the Resource Groups for funding! Come in, pitch your idea to us and we will consider fully or partially funding your project. • Every Monday, 11am in SUB 245 (second floor, north-east corner). For more info email resourcegroups.ams@ gmail.com.
po t t ery sal e at sprou t s •
The UBC Pottery Club is now selling their work at Sprouts, and have donated some pieces to Sprouts in return for space.
It brings a new addition to the Sprouts atmosphere and allows potters space to showcase their pieces. • Mon–Fri, 9:30am– 4pm, Sprouts, SUB basement. noon yoga $1 • Led by the UBC
Yoga Club— all skill levels are welcome. Bring your own mat and enjoy this invigorating session. RSVP on their Facebook events page. • 12–1pm, UBC Bookstore, $1.
monday, feb. 14 coastal first nations dance festival • This festival high-
lights the richness and diversity of traditional First Nations dance groups from coastal BC through public performances, ticketed events and special school programs. • Runs until Mar 15, 10am–5pm, Museum of Anthropology, $14/$12 + HST. For a full schedule of events, please visit moa.ubc.ca/events or contact (604) 822-5978 or programs@moa.ubc.ca.
tuesday, feb. 15 Dr Mauricio Drel ichman on Prof Talk • On UBC CiTR Ra-
dio’s Prof Talk with host Farha Khan, Dr Mauricio Drelichman from the Department of Economics will discuss economic history as a field of study as well as his research on the economic history of early modern Spain. • 3pm, live programming at citr.ca. Peace it Together Summer Dialogue and Film Program • Non-
profit organization Peace it Together is holding a 2011 summer dialogue and filmmaking program for Israeli, Palestinian and Canadian university
students in partnership with UBC. They are holding an info session on campus for anyone interested to learn more. • 6pm, Global Lounge, Marine Drive Bldg 1, go to peaceittogether.com for more information. CiTR Presents: Ice Cream Social at The Pit Pub • CiTR is
bringing one of Vancouver’s longest running and consistently enjoyed parties back to UBC once again! Last year’s Ice Cream Social was super successful and a great time, so expect nothing less this year. Vancouver’s finest DJs, Tyler Fedchuk and Cam Dales, will play choice cuts from the ’50s and ’60s for a genuinely soulful rock and roll dance experience. • 8pm–1am, Pit Pub, SUB. $5 in advance at The Outpost and CiTR (SUB Room 233), $8 at the door.
wednesday, mar. 16 Spartacus Youth Club Class Series • The Trotskyist League
at UBC presents their third class: The Fraud of Capitalist Democracy. Break with the pro-Imperialist NDP and build a Revolutionary Workers’ Party. • 6:30pm, Room 42V, SUB.
UBC Film Societ y Screening: TRON: LEGACY • The UBC Film
Society will be showing Tron: Legacy, starring Jeff Bridges, Garrett Hedlund and Olivia Wilde. The son of a virtual world designer goes looking for his father and ends up inside the digital world that his father designed. He meets his father’s creation turned bad and a unique ally who was born inside the digital domain of
The Grid. • Runs until Mar. 20, 9:30–11:30pm, Norm Theatre, SUB. $2.50 members, $ 5 non-members.
thursday, mar. 17 wild honey • Platonov has a
way with women and it’s both his blessing and his curse in Michael Frayn’s adaptation of Anton Chekhov’s unfinished play produced by Theatre at UBC. Wild Honey swings between the polar opposites of melodrama and farce and shakes them into an intoxicating cocktail. • Mar. 17–26, 7:30pm, Freddy Wood Theatre, $22 regular, $15 senior, $10 student, $2 high school. Call (604) 822-2678 or go to ubctheatre.universitytickets. com to buy tickets.
friday, mar. 18 the blob arts fest • The Asian
Canadian Cultural Organization (ACCO) presents: “THE BLOB: No Two Are the Same.” ACCO invites you to a night of music, art and food as we celebrate with a range of creative talents, ranging from rock bands, acoustic singers, artists and slam poetry. • 7–9pm, Global Lounge, Marine Drive Bldg 1. $5/person, $3 each for groups of eight or more.
international night • The UBC English Language Institute ( U B C - EL I ) inv i te s yo u to International Night! There will be an international food fair and displays, cultural performances and demonstrations and a great party with music and dancing. • 7pm–12am, SUB Ballroom, $3 (free for performers and food booth participants), must show ID to purchase alcohol.
Alex Hoopes : accounts@ubyssey,ca
contributors Ian Turner Andrew Bates Drake Fenton Kait Bolongaro Mike Dickson Dylan Wall Jon Chiang Tim Blonk Karina Palmitesta
Iqra Azhar Justin Choi Irene Loi Sonia Renger Amelia Rajala Komail Naqvi David Elop Will McDonald
legal The Ubyssey is the official student newspaper of the University of British Columbia. It is published every Monday and Thursday by The Ubyssey Publications Society. We are an autonomous, democratically run student organization, and all students are encouraged to participate. Editorials are chosen and written by the Ubyssey staff. They are the expressed opinion of the staff, and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Ubyssey Publications Society or the University of British Columbia. All editorial content appearing in The Ubyssey is the property of The Ubyssey Publications Society. Stories, opinions, photographs and artwork contained herein cannot be reproduced without the expressed, written permission of The Ubyssey Publications Society. The Ubyssey is a founding member of Canadian University Press (CUP) and adheres to CUP’s guiding principles. Letters to the editor must be under 300 words. Please include your phone number, student number and signature (not for publication) as well as your year and faculty with all submissions. ID will be checked when submissions are dropped off at the editorial office of The Ubyssey; otherwise verification will be done by phone. “Perspectives” are opinion pieces over 300 words but under 750 words and are run according to space. “Freestyles” are opinion pieces written by Ubyssey staff members. Priority will be given to letters and perspectives over freestyles unless the latter is time sensitive. Opinion pieces will not be run until the identity of the writer has been verified. The Ubyssey reserves the right to edit submissions for length and clarity. All letters must be received by 12 noon the day before intended publication. Letters received after this point will be published in the following issue unless there is an urgent time restriction or other matter deemed relevant by the Ubyssey staff. It is agreed by all persons placing display or classified advertising that if the Ubyssey Publications Society fails to publish an advertisement or if an error in the ad occurs the liability of the UPS will not be greater than the price paid for the ad. The UPS shall not be responsible for slight changes or typographical errors that do not lessen the value or the impact of the ad.
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News
editor ARSHY MANN » news@ubyssey.ca assistant editor KALYEENA MAKORTOFF » kmakortoff@ubyssey.ca SENIOR WRITER MICKI COWAN » mcowan@ubyssey.ca
U-Pass and AMS fee restructure pass, bylaws fail Students overwhelmingly show support for tuition lobbying by AMS The AMS referendum results are in. On Friday, the U-Pass and the AMS fee restructure both passed, but by widely differing margins. The U-Pass was overwhelmingly passed by students, with 95 per cent voting in favour of continuing the transit program. The AMS fee restructure passed by a comparatively narrow margin, with only 52 per cent of voters in favour of the fee changes. The housekeeping by-laws also passed. However, the substantial by-laws—which would have seen changes in the quorum required for annual general meetings, as well as moving executive turnover from February to May—failed to reach quorum. The question asking whether the AMS should lobby for lower tuition fees for both Canadian and international students also passed overwhelmingly. “I’m ecstatic, but more tired than anything. I’m exhausted. But I’m really happy with the outcome,” said AMS President Jeremy McElroy. McElroy said that even last week, the AMS was worried the referendum wouldn’t pass. “Last week we were desperate, we were down one coordinator. [“Yes” campaign coordinator
Alyssa Koehn] was running around like a chicken with its head cut off and we were essentially falling apart at the seams and it did not seem likely that this referendum was going to pass.” A total of 13,574 students voted in the referendum, which constituted a 28.9 per cent turnout. Around 5000 of those votes came on the final day of the referendum. “I am so happy, I put in so much work and I’m so glad that it paid off with Council’s help and anybody who put in hours this week,” said Koehn.
“I’m ecstatic, but more tired than anything. I’m exhausted. But I’m really happy with the outcome.” Jeremy McElroy AMS President
“I think that the campaign faced some struggles and I’m glad it paid off in the end,” she said. “I knew it was going to be close and I’m glad that it was close on our side.” Nick Frank, the head of the No campaign, opposed the fee
restructuring as well as the by-law changes and said he was disappointed with how the AMS framed the referendum discussion. “I honestly felt at the beginning of the election it was completely one-sided. Our referendum was completely without discourse, [which] requires more than one person. There was one side. There was no back and forth discussion, no disagreement,” said Frank. “I [just] wish I had made 387 more friends.” Koehn said that she thought the No campaign’s contribution to the dialogue about the referendum was positive. “I’m glad that someone felt that the AMS needed to not just talk the yes side and provide information and that encouraged us to put information out there,” she said. “In the end it was his right and he made us run a better campaign.” The passage of the U-Pass means that students will continue to have access to the popular transit program, although the pass will cost students $30 a month instead of $24 throughout the year. “UBC students love their UPass, and that was demonstrated today,” said McElroy. He went on to say that he wished that more students would have voted on it so it could reach closer to the historic number of voters, but was still satisfied with the result.
With regards to the fee restructuring, McElroy said that despite the small margin, he is very satisfied. “As of yesterday evening we were worried about reaching quorum on the question more than anything, but essentially the surge of votes that came out today, based on the emails that were sent out put us in there. We were quite happy. And again, I’m ecstatic about that passing because it was so desperately needed. “The last time we did this was three years ago, [there was a] completely different group of students, 75 per cent of campus has turned over since the last UPass, so most of them don’t even realize that the U-Pass was even up for question. “So we didn’t do a good enough job of really explaining it to them right from the getgo that if you don’t vote on the U-Pass, you lose it.” He also said that general student apathy was responsible for the lower turnout. “[There was] a surprising amount of apathy from the student body, even about the U-Pass. “I don’t understand what’s wrong with some of these students because we’re generally trying to reach out to them, and they didn’t necessarily un(13,574) derstand or care about what was going on.” U
28.9%
—With files from Micki Cowan
total number of voting students
79
28.9% (13,574)
FAIL
PASSED U-PASS 95.0%
87.0%
52.2%
79.1%
TUITION
AMS FEES
HOUSEKEEPING BY-LAWS
FAILED TO REACH QUORUM
58.2%
SUBSTANTIVE BY-LAWS
Abortion debate on campus stirred by graphic display Andrew bates Contributor An anti-abortion display generated as much controversy Thursday as the issue itself. Last week, UBC Lifeline, a student anti-abortion club, presented the Genocide Awareness Project (GAP). The project, a touring display coordinated by the American-based Center for Bio-Ethical Reform, places images of abortion next to images of genocide, with the intention of generating debate. “Our main goal today was just to get the abortion debate started on campus, [and] stimulate discussion,” said Ania Kasprzak, president of Lifeline. “That was our main point and we thought we got it across.” The GAP has been controversial around the country. On March 4th, a group at Carleton University in Ottawa launched a lawsuit against their university for discrimination after being arrested while presenting a GAP exhibition in the fall. This year, UBC’s Lifeline was permitted to post the full version of the display, rather than the compromises they said they made in the past, which limited the number of signs.
“I’m really impressed with how they’ve let us exercise our right to free speech,” said Paula Samper, a public relations executive with Lifeline. According to Samper, the display’s controversy is largely based on the debate. “If you don’t agree that the unborn are persons...that’s when you get people that are really angry at you that come up to you and say things that are hurtful and offensive,” she said. “This is good,” said Deanna Cune, a first-year Science student. “They should tell people what it looks like to basically have an abortion...people should know.” Across from the GAP display, a number of protesters attempted to counter the GAP display, holding signs and chanting prochoice messages. Justine Spencer, the president of Students for Reproductive Rights (SRR), an abortion rights club on campus, felt that the photos were offensive. “I respect that there’s freedom of expression...but I think it should be a choice to view these images,” Spencer said. “There was a school field trip of small children who walked by and they saw these images. That’s not appropriate.”
Protesters gather across from the GAP display. tim blonk Photo/The Ubyssey
“It’s pretty upsetting,” said Lu Lee, in her second year of First Nations studies. “It’s like they’re trying to induce some sort of visceral traumatic reaction from people...and it feels like violence.” SRR had organized the counter-protest, advancing abortion rights issues and fundraising
for prominent abortion rights organizations. “I think that we need to be here in order to provide a buffer zone for people who are going to be triggered by the display,” said Anna Warje, the vice-president of SRR, “[and] need to see that there are positive messages of choice.”
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geoff lister graphic/the ubyssey
Arshy Mann news@ubyssey.ca
PAS
There was no formal buffer area agreed upon, as there was in the past. Lifeline execs indicated there was conflict last year, but Spencer said that was due to outside groups. “UBC students are respectful of other UBC students,” she said. “That’s why it’s remained peaceful.” Lee disliked the parallels to Native Americans’ genocide, given the links between Christianity and First Nations persecution in Canada. “The hypocrisy is unbelievable,” she said. “[If] they wanted to talk to people about why they were prolife...I would think they’re idiots, but it wouldn’t offend me. This is offensive.” Samper suggested that the message cou ld be t wea ked in the future to deal with the controversy. “It’d be interesting for our club to have a display without the genocide ones. So, having still the photos of the aborted fetuses, but not the ones of the dead Jews or dead people in Rwanda, etcetera,” she said. “Maybe we’ll see, something to test out and find an answer to.” U —With files from Kalyeena Makortoff
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culture Attention is a hot commodity. In a world where anyone with a message has a platform to broadcast it, competition for attention is fiercer than ever. For arts organizations, it’s hard to get heard above the din. “Arts events have increased probably ten- or fifty-fold [in recent years],” said Janet Smith, Arts Editor at the Georgia Straight. She said that this has changed how the Straight chooses who and what to cover. “Everyone’s competing for space, and if somebody can point out an angle to me for a good story, that’s awesome.” That job falls to the publicist. All fields employ public relations specialists—arts groups are increasingly relying on publicists to raise awareness about their events. If you’re an artist, you hire them to ‘present’ you or your work, manage your profile and essentially bring you out of the woodwork and into the public eye. “It’s probably true that [publicists] have more of an influence these days with that many events happening,” said Smith. But do those groups that have a publicist to manage or promote their profile receive more extensive media coverage because of them? Have they become the arbiters of art in our society? For those out there who think publicists are purveyors of PR smoke and mirrors, Rachel Sentes of Gal-Friday begged to differ. “Some people need to get out of that thought process of ‘they’re just selling air,’ because what we’re really selling is air-time,” she said. For artists, clubs and festivals, there are more ways than ever to get their name and whatever they’re selling out there—through blogs, newspapers, podcasts and other mediums. For some in the visual arts, having someone to help navigate those waters can make or break careers. “If you’re working with a small art gallery, a little publicity can go a long way in getting people out to the events [you’re] staging, like poetry readings,” Sentes said. A large part of their job is essentially professional networking, putting people together. This often involves their relationships with clientele in the industry and their ties to newspaper editors and television producers. “There’s no denying they play a large role in us knowing about shows we otherwise would know nothing about,” said Smith. “If the group can afford a publicist, they know us and how to get through to us; their speciality is who my readers are and what sorts of people my writers like to talk about.” Publicists seek to plant ideas in the minds of newspaper and
The cost of fame
In the media world, art is common and attention is a commodity
Indiana Joel Illustration / The Ubyssey
Mike Dickson Contributor
editorS BRYCE WARNES & JONNY WAKEFIELD » culture@ubyssey.ca SENIOR WRITER GINNY MONACO » gmonaco@ubyssey.ca ILLUSTRATOR INDIANA JOEL » ijoel@ubyssey.ca
magazine editors, as well as the patrons of the arts their clients hope to attract to their next show or festival. “I make a point of listening to that radio show or reading that paper or magazine so I can understand [its] demographic,” said Kim Plumley of Publicity Mavens, who has worked for the Eastside Culture Crawl and is doing publicity for the Queer Arts festival this year. “I play matchmaker, ensure that there is a connection and let it be known to them there’s a great story here.” Sarah Buechner’s story is one Plumley helped bring to the attention of the public as well as the media. Born David Buechner, the Juilliard educated pianist underwent gender reassignment surgery in 1998, after which she noticed her career beginning to deteriorate due to bias regarding her lifestyle
choices. CityTV Vancouver ended up doing a feature on her story. “I believe in community and building it, and social media has given us the opportunity to do exactly that. It’s opened up a lot of new dimensions,” said Plumley, adding that blogging, Facebook and Twitter are new and quickly expanding platforms from which to run publicity campaigns. Ellie O’Day was a journalist before finding work in publicity, and has relationships in the former that have helped her work in the latter. “When I started doing publicity, I already knew a lot of people,” O’Day said, who works for the Vancouver International Film Festival, the PUSH Performing Arts Festival and the Vancouver International Children’s Festival among others. “Because I worked in all those media prior to being a publicist, I knew right away what [clients] needed.”
The work of a publicist is to find free editorial content for their clients. Does this blurred line between journalist and publicist, editorial content and advertisement affect what sort of art is in the public eye? Both parties say that not all coverage is funneled through these intermediaries. “Most of your established papers have very clear policies about the differences between advertising and editorials,” O’Day said. Smith said while keeping in touch with publicists is a big part of her job, just as they are trained to pitch stories, editors are trained to say no to them too. “Not everything we write about is pitched to us by publicists,” Smith said. “We have writers with expertise in certain fields, so we can get stories from the grassroots level as well.” But publicists are also key figures for editors and journalists because they pitch a ‘hook,’ or a certain angle on a story, that the publicist knows are of interest to that publication’s viewer or readership. “We get so many emails and so many press kits over the wire that it helps to have a publicist that makes yours stand out,” said Smith. “In this day and age, there’s such an onslaught of information and groups trying to get their word out that it helps to have a publicist because they get the word out in a more targeted way.” Changes in media and in how word gets around have changed how both O’Day and Smith go about their jobs. “A lot of us in media were panicking a couple of years ago when the papers were downsizing, and we just had to catch on with the new media stuff and get on with it,” said O’Day. “Working with film festivals, for example; if I had a sidebar kind of story, I’d probably pitch it to [Georgia Straight movie section editor] Craig Takeuchi’s blog rather than the paper. My skills as a publicist have had to change along with changes in the media.” It seems that a new breed of publicist requires a new breed of journalist, and vice-versa. Both are tasked with bringing the public’s attention to stories and events of interest, and though their methods are different, the mutual benefits of the relationship are not lost on either party. “It’s important to have relationships with the editors and producers, because they are the ones who are going to expose your client’s work,” Plumley said. “Publicists are starting to collaborate instead of compete, and that’s going to be great for anyone looking to raise their profile.” U
food with kait bolongaro welcoming the Persian New Year The d ist i nct f lavours that make Iranian food u n ique are generally classified under the broad term ‘Middle Eastern’. But wh i le t here are some dishes that overlap, such as the vast assortment of kebab, much of the variety in Persian food isn’t found in any other cuisine. “Iranian food is my favourite,” said Poureya Bazargani, an Iranian-Canadian Ph.D. in Civil Engineering. “Whenever I eat [Iranian food] in Vancouver, I am reminded of home.” The foundation of any Persian meal is rice and meat, explained Bazargani. The rice is eaten either plain, with meats that have been cooked in a sauce, or seasoned with saffron and szereshk, tart dried barberries which bring out the sweeter flavour of the saffron. Lamb, beef and chicken are widely used in Iranian recipes. “Ghormeh sabzi is probably the most famous Persian beef dish,” said Paul Reyes, a server at Darchin Restaurant downtown. “It is a stew with beef marinated with salt, pepper and sour sundried limes, mixed with kidney beans and served with spinach, parsley, green onions and plain basmati rice.” Another famous dish is called soltani, derived from the word ‘king’ in Farsi. It is a big meal with two kebabs. The first, the actual soltani, is grilled steak bathed in salt, pepper and lemon juice; the second kebab, kabideh, is grilled ground beef which has been formed into small pieces and skewered. “It takes a lot of culinary skill to make sure that the kabideh stays on the skewer,” said Bazargani. “I use egg to hold the ground beef together [on the skewer] and leave it in the fridge for at least 12 hours. I then season it with salt, pepper and tumeric.” The meal is then finished off with a charred whole tomato, crisp raw onion and plain basmati rice. Doorgh is another Persian specialty. It is a fizzy sour yogurt drink, which is popular in Iran. The yogurt is left out for several days to ferment, which gives it the sour taste, and it naturally carbonates, said Bazargani. It tastes like a soda water and Indian lassi hybrid, without the expected sweetness. U
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Porn at the Norm tonight
Film
guys and Guitars in Gage elevator
A scene from the film. Photo courtesy of the artist
Bryce Warnes culture@ubyssey.ca On Monday, March 14, the Norm will feature the adult film Pirates. Riding the buccaneer fad spawned by Pirates of the Carribean: Curse of the Black Pearl, the movie is the centrepiece of the UBC Film Society’s second Porn at the Norm event. “The last Porn at the Norm that was shown was Debbie Does Dallas,” said UBC Film Society SubFilms President Sandie Chen. “It’s part of FilmSoc lore. We have a DVD in the club room and it gets watched every once and a while.” Debbie Does Dallas came to the SUB five years ago, courtesy of then-member Lachlan McLean, who discovered the film in his parents’ house. “For him, it was a way of making fun of his parents’ porn,” said Chen. “Debbie Does Dallas is also from the 60s or 70s, so I think that was sort of the motivation for him. It’s kind of like...retro porn.” Pirates has a different appeal. Released in 2005, the film set
U
records with both its million-dollar budget and the 11 Adult Video News awards it received. “Pirates seemed like a really perfect movie to show for Porn at the Norm, because it’s fairly theatrical for one thing, and it is film-related, in that it’s a spin on Pirates of the Caribbean. For a porn, it’s kind of more mainstream,” said Chen. Pirates recounts the tale of Captain Stagnetti (Tommy Gunn), a swashbuckler seeking, with his first mate Serena (Janine Lindemulder), the ancient and powerful Sceptre of Inca. He is pursued by Captain Reynolds (Evan Stone) and his first officer (Jesse Jane), who learn of Stagnetti’s plot after rescuing a woman named Isabella (Carmen Luvana) from drowning. As the action-packed plot unfolds, the characters have many different kinds of sex with one another. According to the Adult Film Database, the breakdown of the scenes in Pirates, in alphabetical order, is: all girl, anal, fetish, sex toys; all girl, fetish, sex toys; all girl, fetish; all girl, finger
Online exclusives
The last in our series on lifestyle diets: fruitarian, and a video on UBC’s iPhone app at ubyssey.ca/culture.
fuck, oral (female to female); all girl, finger fuck; all girl, finger fuck; all girl, oral (female to female); all girl, pussy spread; all girl, pussy spread; handjob, oral (blowjob); intercourse, kissing; intercourse, spoon; intercourse; kissing; oral (blowjob), orgy, threesomes; oral (blowjob); oral (blowjob); oral (male to female); oral (male to female); oral (male to female); reverse cowgirl. “Playing porn at a big theatre, at least on campus, kind of has the effect of de-eroticizing the whole thing,” said Chen. “If someone watched this in their own home, by themselves, it might be erotic. But when it’s watched in a giant theatre, I think the appeal is that it kind of makes fun of it. “And it’s just a strange experience,” she added. “For some people to watch a porn with a room full of other people.” U Pirates will play at 7pm on Monday in the Norm theatre. Admission for FilmSoc members is $2.50 and $5 for non-members. 18+ only. IDs will be checked at the door.
A pair of Forestry troubadours hold court in Gage’s elevators most Friday nights. Trevor Simmons, a residence advisor, and Marc-Antoine LeClerc perform under the name Trademark. Drawing crowds with their acoustic jams, the duo’s performances offer at-home entertainment for occupants of the Gage buildings. “We just wanted to jam and entertain our friends,” said Simmons. “We want to put a smile on every Gage resident,” added LeClerc. “And dude, the acoustics in here are amazing.” Trademark doesn’t have a publicist, a booking agent or even a MySpace. If you want to catch their performances, it’ll have to be the old fashioned way: in the flesh. Drop by Gage on a Friday night, and bounce around between the main floor and the 17th. —with files from Harsev Oshan Geoff Lister Photo / The Ubyssey
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Investigative
section EDITOR TREVOR RECORD » features@ubyssey.ca Team lead JENNY TSUNDU » investigative@ubyssey.ca
Where does your food come from? Tracking the sustainability of three AMS food products Iqra Azhar Justin Choi Irene Lo Sonia Renger investigative@ubyssey.ca Does eat i n g loc a l ly mea n eat i n g sustainably? In 2005, Vancouver writers A lisa Smith and JB MacKinnon released The 100-Mile Diet: A Year of Eating Locally, which claimed that eating locally meant the consumption of less fossil fuels, better support for local farmers and an overall healthier diet. The local food movement has since exploded in popularity, which has seen
the AMS add local foods in food services as part of their sustainability commitment. However, AMS President Jeremy McElroy said that the added costs make it difficult. “The AMS [committed] to buy as much local produce as possible,” said McElroy. “But on the off season, sometimes it is not financially sustainable for us to do that...In addition, the supplier company that we use for the majority of our food has their relationships, and their ordering processes, that we have to sometimes go along with. The added costs and resources necessary to get [sustainable products] sometimes aren’t feasible.”
The Ubyssey’s investigative team recently traced the main ingredients of the three most popular food choices in the SUB. In general, few of the ingredients are local. McElroy said that although the AMS buys local food—especially from the UBC Farm, when possible—it may take student-led projects to further increase the amount of sustainable food available on campus. “Given that we do have the Sustainability Projects Fund I would definitely welcome any project to investigate more sustainable food processes for AMS Food Services.” U —With files from Trevor Record
Chicken Quesadilla Ingredient key
Food item
Distributor location
manufacturer location
Tortilla
Burnaby
Burnaby
Refried beans
Delta
California
Tomato
Richmond
Tracy, CA
Chicken
Burnaby
Surrey
Green onion
Richmond
Salinas, CA
Monterey jack cheese
Vancouver
Saskatoon
Sour cream
Burnaby
Saskatoon
Salsa
Delta
Texas
Food item
Distributor location
manufacturer location
Flour
Richmond
Armstrong
Yeast
Richmond
Canada
Salt
Delta
Quebec
Sugar
Delta
Vancouver
Water
UBC
Vancouver
Spinach
Richmond
Salinas, CA
Food item
Distributor location
manufacturer location
Rice
Richmond
Santa Fe Springs,CA
Seaweed
Richmond
China
Yam
Richmond
Livingston, CA
Tempura batter
Richmond
Canada
Wasabi
Richmond
Los Angeles, CA
Ginger
Richmond
China
BC product Canada product US product The chicken quesadilla is available at The Pendulum. Its chicken is supplied by Superior Poultry Processors Ltd., who get their poultry from over 240 different farms, all in various locations within BC. Saputo uses Armstrong brand monterey jack cheese and Dairyland brand sour cream. The cheese is transported by Agrifoods International Cooperative, who work in coordination with BC dairy farmers from the Okanagan, Creston and Smithers. The sour cream is manufactured in Saskatoon by dairy farmers who are residents of Saskatchewan. The Sunripe brand tomatoes and also the green onions are produced on California farms. The Pita Bread Factory tortilla has ingredients from Canada and the US.
Spinach Bagel Ingredient key BC product Canada product US product The spinach bagel is available at Bernoulli’s Bagels. The main ingredient, flour, is Rogers brand, which uses local grain from BC, Saskatchewan and Alberta. Rogers said that for their sugar, they use local BC manufactured sugar. Windsor salt comes from various mines in eastern and western Canada. The spinach in the bagel is planted and harvested in Yuma, Arizona.
Yam Roll
Ingredient key Canada product US product International product
The yam roll is available at The Honour Roll. All of the ingredients in the yam roll, with the exception of the yams, are supplied by the Nishimoto Trading Company. Most of the rice is from the US but some of it is also their own brand, Shikiku. The Takaokaya seaweed and Kinjirushi wasabi are both produced in different parts of Japan. The Golden Ginger product is primarily from California but some of it also comes from China and Japan. The Mishima brand tempura batter is based in Japan with US and China-based subsidiaries. The yams are supplied by Central Foods from AV Thomas Produce in Livingston, California.
The AMS’s food sustainability vow “The AMS Food and Beverage Department is committed to providing sustainably and locally produced foods whenever possible, supporting applied learning on food-related issues, reducing waste and fostering positive changes through staff training, menu design and various community events.” —From the AMS web site
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sports
editor MARIE VONDRACEK » sports@ubyssey.ca
Disappointing bronze end to a promising season Uncharacteristic semi-final performance drops ‘Birds into bronze medal face-off
A heroic Whyte played through a fractured foot for his Thunderbirds. Richard Lam Photo/UBC athletics
Drake Fenton Contributor HALIFAX—This weekend in the CIS final eight basketball tournament, at Halifax’s Metro Centre, the No. 1 ranked UBC Thunderbirds experienced the highs and lows of competing under extreme expectations—finishing with a bronze medal after defeating the Saskatchewan Huskies 111-95 in Sunday’s consolation round. As the top-ranked team in the country, the bar was set high for the ‘Birds. With a plethora of veteran experience coming from the trio of Brent Malish, Alex Murphy and Josh Whyte, a third consecutive appearance in the gold medal game was expected. “Obviously, we are very disappointed,” said head coach Kevin Hanson after the bronze medal victory. “The outlook at the beginning of the season was to win a national championship.” The Thunderbirds started the weekend off against the eighthranked Acadia Axemen. Following a shaky back-and-forth first half, UBC’s squad displayed tremendous poise in the second half, overcoming the hostile hometown crowd and early tipoff (9am PST), to pull away with a 96-77 victory.
Plumb had a game-high 20 points and Whyte chipped in with 19. Saturday night marked the low point of the tournament for the ‘Birds. UBC squared off against conference rivals, the fifthranked Trinity Western Spartans. UBC started the match in excellent form, jumping to a 22-12 lead by the end of the first quarter. Early on in the second frame things still appeared promising, with UBC at one point establishing a 16-point advantage. Then the refs started blowing their whistles. “Things were rolling for us [in the first half] and then a whole bunch of players got into foul trouble,” commented Hanson on Saturday. “We were sitting six different players...and we got out of sync with our rotations.” Trinit y doggedly pursued UBC’s lead after trailing 39-30 at halftime. In the second half, both Brent Malish and Graham Bath fouled out of the game, and the score remained tight until the final seconds. Trinity trailed 72-71 with 30 seconds left on the clock. They worked the ball down court and the Spartans’ Kyle Coston (the game’s MVP) drained a three point shot to push Trinity into a 74-72 lead. That would stay the final score
after a buzzer-beating long bomb by Kamar Burke rimmed out. The game was an obvious upset and was only the second time this year UBC had scored less than 80 points. The Thunderbirds’ offensive attack lacked fluidity and continuously missed shots that on most nights would have been routine. Josh Whyte was far from his usual self, going 3-15 in field goal attempts and 0-3 from downtown. The next day, it was made known that Whyte had played the first two games of the tournament with a stress fracture in his foot. “On Monday we found out that he had a stress fracture in his foot,” said coach Hanson. “He didn’t practice all week; he took a [cortisone] shot before game one and put together an incredible effort, especially in the second half. You know, he couldn’t walk before the second game and he took another shot. He put everything in his heart towards his team, sacrificing personal injury like that to play,” Hanson concluded. With a championship gold medal no longer an option, UBC was still left with the opportunity to salvage their tournament and leave Halifax with the bronze. On Sunday afternoon they squared off against rival and conference foe, the University of Saskatchewan Huskies. From the onset, victory was never in question. The game unofficially ended with 6:39 left in the second quarter. The score was 48-44 and the Huskies were slowly crawling back into the contest. Then Saskatchewan’s Jamelle Barrett received a technical foul on a play with Alex Murphy. This led to Huskies head coach Barry Rawlyk garnering another technical foul for disputing the Barrett infraction. UBC hit all four shots from the charity line and proceeded to go on a 12-point run, bringing the score to 64-44. The Huskies were never able to recover. UBC’s offensive domination was spurred on by fifth-year senior Alex Murphy, who rained down terror on the Huskies from the three-point line, going seven for ten and finishing the game with a career-high 36 points. “Alex Murphy, in what he did in his career, sometimes starting and sometimes coming off the bench, to have a career high in your final game is an amazing thing. He just held us together like glue. This will be a memory he will always have,” Hanson said. Not having a chance to play in the national title game was far from the result UBC expected, but Hanson didn’t feel that the tournament was a complete disaster. “It’s always good to win the last one, there is a sour and bitter taste when you lose and get knocked out, but at least the guys have something to take pride in by winning that last game,” he said.
“It’s a very difficult game to play [in] but they gutted it out... you have to give a lot a credit to those fifth-year guys. Both Alex and Brent [Malish] have been here five times now and have finished in different positions. They can retire from university basketball very proud of themselves and the year they had...I am proud to have had the opportunity to coach them.” Wit h t he season wrapped up, t he ‘Birds wi l l be looking towards next year. Wit h both guards Whyte and Murphy gone, UBC may have a surprise candidate in line to take the starting role at point—Kamar Burke. Burke opened t he bronze medal game at guard for the ‘Birds and handled himself quite admirably, notching 15 points, 11 rebounds and eight
assists on the day, only two assists short of a triple double. Burke, for the majority of the season, has been UBC’s big man, but coach Hanson thinks he may be even more of a contribution at guard. “He is actually a ‘pass first’ type of player...Magic Johnson was the first big man to play the point guard position and Kamar models his game after him. It’s kind of his natural position, he passes well...you might see a lot of him there next year.” UBC’s roster will have six seniors on it next year and will once again be one of the more veteran teams in the CIS. Hopefully the taste of recent nearmisses at nationals and the experience gained there will be enough motivation for the 2012 roster to win UBC’s first WP McGee Trophy in 40 years. U
Thunderbird Athlete Council
athlete of the week
Alex Murphy
Alex Murphy in action. jon Chiang Photo/the ubyssey
Alex Murphy earned Athlete of the Week after a stellar weekend at the CanWest final fours March 4-5 at War Memorial Gym. Murphy, who recently received a CanWest all-star nomination after a very accomplished fifth and final season with the T-Birds, was unstoppable in his final career home game. He made an incredible near-perfect 22 out of 23 free-throws, an essential contribution to the 107-100 win over the Huskies for the Canada West victory. Murphy played in his final match as a Thunderbird last weekend in Halifax, leading his team to a bronze medal at the CIS national championships. —Amelia Rajala
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Bad trips up the wall
Professional teams from here? No, thanks. Why I’m against a move to the NCAA ian turner iturner@ubyssey.ca
One of the more successful athletes on the wall. Kellan higgins Photo/The Ubyssey
Dylan Wall Contributor “He wore a hockey helmet and rode a granny bike. In the first two minutes, he was lapped over three times,” said Jian Huang, a second year Forestry student. He was referring to his friend’s struggle to compete in last year’s Storm the Wall, UBC’s largest Rec event. UBC Rec claims Storm the Wall to be the “largest Intramural event in North America,” with about 2500 students expected to compete this year. Students compete in a five-person relay, including a 225 yard swim, 450 metre dash, 2.8 kilometre bike ride and a one kilometre run. At the end, each team member must climb over, or “storm,” a 12-foot wall. Huang recalls his friend’s race as “a last-minute attempt to earn participation points. [The day before the race] he realized he had
no bike and borrowed the best he could find. Unfortunately, the ‘best’ was also the crappiest bike I have ever seen,” said Huang. And to make matters worse, “he had no helmet, so he used a hockey helmet. He had no speed and was passed by almost everyone.” “I did the swim,” said Huang about his own team’s interesting experience, “but I had never learned the front crawl. I only knew the butterfly and breast stroke. It was too long of a distance for me to do butterfly, so I chose the breast stroke. I got lapped twice.” His teammate Diane Kim said, “We had to make up for so much time in the bike and the run. I did the run. At the end of my run our teammate, Jon Lee, ended up knocking me to the ground.” Kim, a second-year Commerce undergrad, said she did not remember how it happened: “We just collided.”
Lee, a fourth-year Commerce student, said, “two different referees pointed our team to two different walls. So half our team went one way and half went the other. Diane and I collided, and I ended up laying her out. And I wanted to win, so I dragged her to the wall.” Their team came fourth in their heat, but was disqualified for a registration mix-up. Registration for this year’s Storm the Wall ends on March 21 and costs $42.50 per team, or $10.50 for the single person race. The event starts March 27. For those worried about showing up with a granny bike or hockey helmet, UBC Rec also offers a bike and helmet rental program. Students without equipment can email events1@rec.ubc.ca to request a rental. However, there are a limited number of bikes available, so Rec suggests students email as early as possible. U
In my first year, I was a member of UBC’s novice rowing team. Five times a week, I’d wake up at 4:30am to bike 15 kilometres to the UBC rowing facility in Richmond. Truth be told, I often simply woke up and fell back asleep, but on the days I didn’t, I’d go through the morning stretches, row for an hour or so and bike back to UBC for my eight o’clock classes. If I attended class, I’d sit in my wet, sweat-drenched spandex. We had five afternoon workouts as well. In the second term, we trained as frequently as the varsity team. We were novices only in name. I quit the night before a trip to Spokane, Washington, in late February or early March—I forget the date—because if I went I would have failed the secondyear economics midterm I had the Tuesday after the trip. As I recall, UBC men’s rowing head coach Mike Pierse told me that my decision was understandable, but that I should also consider how my decision would impact others, in this case my teammates. He was right. He was good coach and person, and I enjoyed my time spent in his program. I quit for a few underlying reasons. One, my heart was never in the sport. I joined for all the wrong reasons: resume-padding and such. Two, I wasn’t mature or organized enough to handle the pressures of varsity.
But even if I were more mature or organized, varsity would have been a serious challenge. Most of us rowers were academic laggards. The exception was Robert Vanner who got into the University of Toronto’s MD/PhD program. Rowing at UBC is by far the most demanding sport offered by Athletics. Unlike a number of varsity teams, we don’t only meet up four times a week to train. At least half our training sessions were outdoors in the rain, dark, and cold on the fast-flowing Fraser River. We didn’t saunter over to War Memorial Gym or the Doug Mitchell Arena after the sun came up. Our day began at 4:30 am. While a varsity athlete, I got a good sense of the struggles of the most taxed varsity athlete. And it’s with that perspective in mind that I don’t think UBC should join the NCAA.
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As an athlete in one of the sports UBC funds the least, I didn’t get a single dollar directly from the university. My parents paid the bills.Had that not been the case, my conversation with Pierse probably would have been different. If Pierse had given me, say, a $16,000/per year athletic scholarship, the maximum allowed in the NCAA’s Division II, he would have expected a serious return on that investment. Certainly some second-year econ midterm wasn’t going to stand in the way of going to Spokane. cont. on page 9
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From Page 8 I’ll write a fictional but probable guide to what could have happened in the leadup to when I quit. One, I probably wouldn’t have taken a second-year econ class in first year. UBC would have registered me in courses— as former Hawkeye Megan Heise was in her first and only year at the University of Iowa. (See “Leaving the Business Behind,” February 20th 2011.) Or UBC would have recommended courses for me to take. Last week, California Watch, an online investigative journalism outfit, reported that Stanford University produced a list of easy classes for student-athletes to register in (Stanford has since discontinued the list). NFL quarterback Matt Leinart was famously registered in a ballroom dancing course in his final year at the University of Southern California. Two, I may have been provided with the midterm prior to writing it—as former Central Arizona pitcher Jordan Anderson was. NCAA supporters often bring up the league’s tougher academic eligibility requirements. True, unlike the CIS-SIC (Canada’s athletic association for universities), the NCAA has a GPA minimum requirement to be eligible to play, but schools find a way around the academic requirements and in the process attack the integrity of their academic departments. * * * But regardless of the precautionary steps taken to ensure I’d clear the GPA minimum, Pierse would have probably said that he needed a return on his $16,000 investment—aka, you’re going to Spokane, Ian. There’s the rub: athletic scholarships are given not for academic success, but gameday success, which leads to the watering down of academics to ensure the coach can justify their program’s annual monetary haul to the higher-ups in the administration. In the NCAA, the athletes become defacto employees of the university. As former Western Washington University lineman Kelly Kurisu said of his former coaches, “[They’d say] you’re here at this time. You got to do this at this time. It doesn’t matter what else is going on. We’re paying you.” If you’re not there, your contract/athletic scholarship won’t be renewed—because you broke the rules. And because of the scholarships and ensuing hype— holy shit, I’m worth $16,000 dollars!—it’s
R
natural that many athletes are for UBC joining Division II. There are other reasons UBC’s administration could also be psyched about going south: the NCAA is a far more widely known brand than the CIS. If we were accredited by an American accrediting agency, American students at UBC would qualify for federal aid more easily, and more American students may come for the school spirit and big-time athletics. But I’m unconvinced of the brand argument. It’s obvious UBC spends millions branding itself every year and would gladly find yet another way to brand itself, but the NCAA is a dirty word of sorts. Just look at ESPN. The entire site is filled with stories of collegiate coaches making illegal phone calls and pimping out women for recruiting endeavours. Yes, I know these schools are Division I, but we’d still be associated with all that. * * * There’s the money side of the NCAA, as well. For starters, how Athletics’ budget would change if we joined the NCAA is unclear. Right now, our budget is $4.5 million, which supports 28 teams. In the NCAA’s Division II, the average spent for fielding seven male teams (including football) and eight female teams is $9 million for the top quarter of schools.
Assuming this, our teams’ financing will be more comparable to the bottom quarter of teams—the Division II average is $2.2 million for 15 teams. Doubling the number of sport teams wouldn’t require an increase in Athletics’ budget, but I sincerely doubt our university would switch conferences simply to be among the most under-funded, and subsequently underperforming, programs. Take Simon Fraser University as an example. Last year, when they were a CIS-SIC member, they had three full-time football coaches. This past fall, they played their first year in the NCAA’s Division II. They hired three additional coaches for their inaugural season. Will we let ourselves get out-coached by SFU? Probably not. If we go, expect to see the Athletics budget increase: more coaches hired per team, more public-relations employees, more athletic scholarships, etc. Now, UBC says that the operating budget will be stable and that increases for athletic scholarships will come from a campaign that hopes to raise the scholarship endowment fund to $75 million. Right now, it’s at $8 million. If you think UBC Athletics can raise that much money in a few years time, you’re more confident than me. I find a possible increase in Athletic’s budget if they can’t follow their proposed plan very irksome: UBC Athletics is not
a stand-alone institution, as has been claimed in the past. They’re financed by a $189.66 fee levied on all full-time students and smaller fees for part-time students. That’s approximately $7 million we give them annually. Take that away and they’d have a much different budget. They’re playing with our money. Because of that, our opinion should be very seriously considered: if we, the students, oppose the NCAA, UBC shouldn’t be joining the NCAA. As a student, I’d like to vote on this issue. Where’s the referendum? This decision should not be made by UBC President Stephen Toope and others in the administration alone. It’s unclear what the actual situation is, but I’d like the consultation process to be advertised more. UBC hasn’t advertised this in The Ubyssey, on its website prominently, in a recent email or on its big screen across from Shoppers. * * * But for me, the dominant reason to oppose the NCAA goes back to the salary issue. One athlete in particular comes to mind. Last spring, I was sitting with an engineer in the library when a former classmate of his walked by. They started to talk. During the brief conversation, the classmate, who plays on one of UBC’s smaller teams, said he switched out of Engineering because his coach said it would detract too much from his athletic endeavours. I didn’t introduce myself as a Ubyssey reporter, so I’ll omit his name. But he plays in the NAIA, an American athletic association widely considered to be below the NCAA’s Division II with regard to quality of play. Wouldn’t it be prudent to ask ourselves if the NAIA is too professional before we join Division II? Arianne Duchesne, an Engineering student and starting point guard for the women’s basketball team, said she didn’t find athletics to be too professional, or that it’s impossible to be a varsity athlete and engineer if you spread your degree over five years. The NCAA only allows four years of eligibility, though, and she’s a CIS athlete. But UBC students I’ve talked to who once played in the NCAA found the athletic scholarship they received allowed their coaches to determine their schedules, which was done to have game-day success, which saw the academics placed to the side. And that goes entirely against the ethos of an academic institution. U
Want to see more UBC Rec events in the paper? Email us. marie vondracek | sports@ubyssey.ca
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games & comics sudoku (medium) comicmaster, by maria cirstea
likealittle weekly top five flirts At 17 UBC—Downtown (Translink): Male, Black hair. 5pm: asian guy wearing plaid + grey toque—your smile made my day =) At scarfe: Female, Black hair. Love at first sight. Bio 458...asian girl...about 20 minutes late for class...looking forward to seeing you next class =) At War Memorial Gym: Male, Other. Saw you play last weekend and sometimes in the SUB. You are so good looking and a great bball player! You are #1 to me #4!
At Bookstore: Female, Black hair. Gorgeous girl that works at the bookstore...I timed out the line so I could get to you and once I did, I completely choked. I stood there dumbfounded as you rang in my pens and notebook. I’d love to meet again,...I promise I won’t be such a wuss :) At Bird Coop (UBC): Male, Brunette. Dear Boy with Yellow Sleeveless Shirt, You have the most gorgeous arm muscles, I have ever seen in my entire life. Just thought you should know. Sincerely, Girl on the Treadmill.
solution
Submit your comics to our website at ubyssey.ca/volunteer/ submit-a-comic. virginie menard | production@ubyssey.ca
U theubyssey.ca
2011.03.14/u byssey.ca /opinions/11
opinions
do you care? WRITE US A LETTER » feedback@ubyssey.ca
editorial with great power (ie: money) comes great responsibility The AMS is in a jubilant mood—and rightly so. The U-Pass, easily the most popular program in their history, has been renewed. And a fee restructure that will eliminate the need for widespread cuts for the foreseeable future also passed. This is a big deal. But the truth is that they got lucky. Up until Thursday, it was looking like most of the referendum questions wouldn’t even achieve quorum. In fact, despite all of the talk about the U-Pass being an instant quorum-maker, the substantial by-law changes question didn’t get enough votes to come into play. And when it comes to the fee restructure, almost half of students were against it. If 386 of us had voted another way—that’s one first-year psychology class—the AMS would be just as screwed today as they were on Thursday. So why is it that after a year of talking about the need for a referendum, one aborted attempt and tens of thousands of dollars later, the fee referendum came so close to failing? The most obvious answer is that despite the year-long hand-wringing, the referendum campaign didn’t start in earnest until the absolute last minute. The AMS was handicapped by the combination of a former president who had little inclination to actually plan for a referendum and an election schedule that meant most of January and February were devoted to campaigning and transition. However, even without these reasons, the truth is that the AMS is out of touch with the student populace. They approached this referendum as a top-down initiative coming from the executive and council. But in a campus as decentralized as UBC’s, the only way to get a large number of students on board with anything is to engage from the bottom. The opportunity was there. Clubs, people with sustainability ideas, residences, the resource groups and, yes, the campus media, all had a stake in the referendum. But instead of seeing these groups as equal partners, the AMS treated them as a liability, something that could screw up their messaging. Only they and they alone could be trusted to tell students why they needed more money—this became a referendum on the AMS itself. Unsurprisingly, many students associate the AMS with lackluster leadership, stunts to the UN, infighting and a general lack of competence. Suprisingly, this caught the AMS off-guard. And it might seem easy to blame the lackluster number of votes on student apathy, as AMS President Jeremy McElroy appeared to do after the results were announced. But students are no more apathetic than they were three years ago, when the vote totals for the U-Pass were almost double what they were this time around. If you can’t get students to show up to vote on the one thing that is integral to their lives—that’s a transit pass, not lobbying, for those of you wondering—that’s a failure on the AMS’s part. Even more worrying is the fact that the AMS had absolutely no viable back-up plan. Whenever asked what he would do if the referendum didn’t pass, McElroy reiterated that they would simply hold another one. By not being upfront about the effects of voting no, it only encouraged those who believed the AMS was campaigning in bad faith. And if you can’t get students to care when the UPass is on the line, there is no amount of money or wizardry that can change things. The simple answer is that the AMS would have had to make massive cuts. Now that the referendum did pass, another daunting question is looming on the horizon: what to do with all of the money? If the AMS sees this as a blank cheque, they risk alienating students even more. The AMS needs to remember that even though about half of students voted to give them more money, the other half thought it wasn’t worth the change in their pocket. So the onus is on them to make sure that when they spend your hardearned money, it’s on sensible projects that will build upon a relationship between the AMS and students that is obviously lacking. Otherwise, the next referendum could very well be for reducing fees, not raising them. U
virginie ménard graphic/the ubyssey
opinions
McElroy: 5 Days for the Homeless should be taken in context Justin McElroy coordinating@ubyssey.ca
bags, some won’t. The only shelter will come when they go to classes, or need to use the washroom. It’s a campaign that inspires plenty of donations. But when students who participate talk about the “struggle” they undergo, it also inspires plenty of raised eyebrows. There’s no way that spending five days outside, in March, at UBC, with friends, going to class, while getting the unlimited use of washrooms can replicate being homeless in any way. Everyone knows this and it’s not belittling to point out that this is an awareness campaign with a twist, not a reality TV show.
And yet, there are those that called last year’s fundraiser an “emotional struggle” or “taste of how marginalized and shunted homeless people may feel.” This December, UBC student Nima Farzaneh spent a week on the streets, in downtown Vancouver, actually spending time within the homeless community. He knew he would leave in a week, but it still gave him a far more realistic experience than the 5 Days for the Homeless campaign could. This isn’t to demean the campaign, or disparage the volunteers. It’s a noble cause and a good way to raise awareness. We hope they let their actions speak for themselves. U
in which brian is sorry
concerning katic’s column
Julian Ross Markowitz asked me to make it clear that he was one of the people who came to speak against Bijan’s censure, but was not involved in the “no” campaign. I’m happy to make that clear, though—as I stated in no uncertain terms—I’m convinced that any similarities in the people who were anti-censure and anti-fee referendum are purely coincidental anyway.
In response to Gordon Katic’s column: “Women’s issues are universal issues.” Women’s issues are indeed important, but Katic uses logical fallacies, misleading omissions and even outright lies. No cause, no matter how worthy, should be promoted with such tactics. Katic says that everyone should care about women’s issues, and he’s right. But he’s wrong when he says that all men are responsible for them. It is logically invalid to say that all members of a group are responsible for the actions of some of its members, when membership in the group is due solely to accident of birth. Women commit the majority of child abuse, the vast majority of infanticide, false rape allegations and 100 per cent of paternity fraud. Would Katic agree that all women are responsible for stopping these despicable acts? Katic implies that the gender pay gap is caused by men. In fact, it is because of choice. Women choose to pursue lower-paying professions (teaching over engineering), safer and more comfortable professions (secretarial work over garbage collecting), choose to take more time off work, choose to work less hours than men. Katic claims that 95 per cent of domestic violence [DV] is committed by men. This is simply false. There has been no legitimate study that claims
that 95 per cent of DV is committed by men. The only sources for this number are unscientific and flawed, such as police statistics and figures from domestic violence shelters; and one survey (the US Crime survey). In contrast, there are literally dozens of scientific and methodologically valid studies that show DV is about equal by gender. The domestic violence wikipedia page has links to metastudies (collections of scholarly studies) that show this. Further, Katic’s claim would imply that lesbian partners would be largely non-violent, whereas gay men would have much more violent relationships. Studies show that both gay and lesbian relationships show equal violence to heterosexual ones. I applaud Katic’s goal of promoting women’s rights. I urge him not to do so at the expense of men, the vast majority of which are good, decent people.
For the next five days, there’s going to be a sight at University Boulevard and East Mall more commonly seen at Powell and Hastings. Ten UBC students will be living outside the bookstore, as they take part in a campaign called 5 Days for the Homeless, an annual event at UBC since 2008. Last year they raised $16,500 and this year they hope to raise that to $20,000. So for the next week, there’s no bed or tent, no food, no money and no toothpaste. Some will use sleeping
letters
—Brian Platt criticism of men misses the mark In Gordon Katic’s article (“Katic: Women’s issues are universal issues”), the author suggests that popular culture is somewhat to blame for destructive masculine tendencies. But Katic offers no examples of what in popular culture needs to be critiqued. Katic, could you please supply the Ubyssey’s readership with some evidence on how “the idealization of violent masculinity” in our film, literature, television, etc.? (I ask because I seem to have the opposite reaction from popular culture. To me, the prevailing state of Western society reveals a breakdown of the “physical strength, independence and stoicism” of what we call the male gender). —Scott Wilson
—Celestian Rince Arts
We disagree with Cel’s letter, but what do you think? Let us know at feedback@ubyssey.ca
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12/ubyssey.ca/our campus/2011.03.14
our campus Bryce warnes culture@ubyssey.ca On Friday, a utilit y vehicle transporting a load of gaussian blur overturned near East Mall and Memorial Road. Before cleanup crews could arrive, the filter had overtaken the Buchanan buildings and the Chan Centre, and was travelling w it h t he w i nd sout h -west towards IK Barber and t he clock tower. Luckily, the blur was prevented from completely unfocusing the Koerner Library and its occupants.UBC Plant Ops showed up with their sharpen and contrast tools and made quick work of cleaning up the mess. This is the second time UBC’s Vancouver campus has suffered a mishap due to a Photoshop function. In 1998, the Student Union Building almost met its undoing when a nearby construction crew lost control of CTRL+Z. U
komail naqvi photo/the ubyssey